Midwife-led continuity models versus other models of care: review and reflections

The Practising Midwife logo This article was first published in The Practising Midwife (see links below), our partner journal for Evidence for Everyday Midwifery. It has been written in two parts; Sarah Chapman (Cochrane UK) first summarises the review and then Alys Einion (Associate Professor in Midwifery at Swansea University) reflects on the evidence and its implications for practice.

Editor’s note 24 August 2022: The Cochrane Review has since been updated and you can read this blog about it: Implementing midwife-led continuity models of care and what do we still need to find out?

The best way to organise maternity care, in terms of clinical and cost effectiveness, continues to be subject to debate.

Here in the UK, combinations of midwife-led, medical-led and shared models of care are available. Midwife-led continuity models of care vary but the defining feature is that a midwife, working with the woman, takes the lead in planning, organising and delivering her care from her first antenatal booking to the postnatal period. Sometimes a team of midwives shares a caseload. Midwife-led care in this review included care delivered in the hospital setting. A Cochrane review has found reliable evidence that there are benefits of midwife-led care compared with alternative approaches, for example where the lead professional is a doctor, or changes at different points.

The review

The Cochrane review includes 15 randomized controlled trials from the UK, Ireland, Canada and Australia, with 17,674 women with low- or mixed- risk pregnancies. All midwives involved were licensed. Home birth was not offered in any of the trials.

What they found

new mother, baby and midwife
Midwife-led care was associated with important benefits for mothers and babies

Midwife-led care was associated with a number of important benefits for mothers and babies and had no more adverse effects than other models of care.

Women who had midwife-led care were less likely to experience regional analgesia, instrumental vaginal birth, preterm birth less than 37 weeks and fetal loss before 24 weeks gestation. They were more likely to have a longer labour, spontaneous vaginal birth and be attended at birth by a known midwife. There was no difference between the groups for a number of other outcomes including caesarean birth or intact perineum.

The review also provides some insight into women’s satisfaction with care and the costs of different models of care, although differences in the way these were measured meant that the results had to be described, rather than combined in a meta- analysis. Most studies reported greater satisfaction with various aspects of care in midwife-led continuity-led care compared with other models, and it appears to be cheaper than medical-led care.

Quality of the evidence

The evidence for all the primary outcomes was graded as high quality, which means we can be confident about the findings.

What we don’t know

This review provides reliable evidence that midwife- led models of care offer specific benefits for mothers and babies. What we don’t know is why. The influence of the model and philosophy of care, and the nature of the relationship between the midwives and mothers, are all potentially important and should be explored in future research. The reviewers highlight other areas that are important to investigate, including: newer midwife-led continuity models of care, such as those that include home birth; the reasons for fewer fetal deaths and preterm births with midwife-led care; and the effects of care models on mothers’ and babies’ health in the longer postpartum period.

Reflections on the review, by Alys Einion

Alys Einion
Alys Einion, Associate Professor in Midwifery at Swansea University

The review by Sandall et al (2015) set out to evaluate and compare the outcomes of models of care defined as being ‘midwife led continuity’ models, which incorporate caseloading. This is a highly topical issue which links to many aspects of the role of the midwife.

The authors of the review define terms in detail that are important in understanding the specific benefits of the defined approaches to care. This includes continuity of care, which involves care by the same team or individual over the period of the pregnancy and puerperium, but Sandall et al (2015) also acknowledge poor definitions of continuity. This is understandable, given that midwife-led care is person-centred and individualised, rather than standardised. This highlights one of the key issues in finding and evaluating evidence about midwifery care from randomised controlled trials.

Reference is made to the benefits of midwifery- led and continuity based models of care for childbearing women. Sandall et al (2015) set out to compare outcomes from midwifery-led models of care which are continuity based, and to see how much these outcomes are influenced by differences in continuity and relationships, and differences in the risk status of the pregnant women being studied. Relational issues are of prime importance to women experiencing maternity care (Clark et al 2015). Risk is a particularly topical issue within maternity care (Healey et al 2015).

Methods

The authors carried out a comprehensive search of the Cochrane Pregnancy and Childbirth specialised register, which is regularly updated, and correlated the findings to summarise the evidence presented by the included trials.

Implications for practice

Midwife and pregnant woman
The evidence on midwife-led care shows no increase in the risk of adverse events

The findings of this review show no increase in the likelihood of any adverse effects from the provision of midwifery-led continuity models of care.

The review indicates that midwifery-led models lead to less use of interventions, which has many implications for women’s experiences, autonomy and satisfaction.

Other important outcomes support midwife-led models of care, including a reduced likelihood of experiencing pre-24 weeks fetal loss, and preterm birth. This is something of significant concern to mothers and to care providers (Moon 2015). Sandall et al (2015) importantly state that the reduction in preterm birth in this review is 24 per cent; a significant finding.This is a strong argument, perhaps one of the strongest, for the value of these models of care, and can be used to influence policy making within clinical practice.

The reduced use of interventions also has implications for costs and resource issues, which is of importance in the current climate of resource scarcity. This can be used to endorse the argument that resources should be focused on midwife-led and continuity models of care.

The review clearly shows no increased risk associated with midwife-led continuity models of care within clinical settings, although it did not cover home birth, only in- hospital and birth centre birth. This provides positive support for midwives advocating to women for birth centre birth and also advocating for continuity of carer during pregnancy, labour and birth.

The authors admit that the complexity of care requires much more investigation to understand more detailed dimensions of this mode of care and the nature of the relationship between the woman and the midwife. However, the findings suggest benefits to this approach to care which should provide midwives with the evidence to lobby governments and healthcare providers for changes in approaches to care, and to continue to promote midwifery models of care and re-vision the future of maternity service design and commissioning.

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Midwife-led continuity models versus other models of care by Sarah Chapman and Alys Einion is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Based on a work at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD004667.pub4/abstract.
Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at http://www.practisingmidwife.co.uk/page.php?id=1.

Images have been purchased from istock.com and shutterstock.com for Evidently Cochrane and are not available for reproduction.

Links:

Chapman S. Cochrane Corner: Midwife-led continuity models versus other models of care for childbearing women, Sandall et al (2015).Practising Midwife 2016;19(3):34. Available from: www.practisingmidwife.co.uk

Einion A. Cochrane Corner: Reflections on the review. Practising Midwife 2016;19(3):35. Available from: www.practisingmidwife.co.uk

Sandall J, Soltani H, Gates S, Shennan A, Devane D. Midwife‐led continuity models versus other models of care for childbearing women. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2016, Issue 4. Art. No.: CD004667. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD004667.pub5. https://www.cochranelibrary.com/cdsr/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD004667.pub5/full

Clark K, Beatty S and Reibel T (2015). ‘Maternity care: a narrative overview of what women expect across their care continuum’. Midwifery, 31(4): 432–437.

Healey S, Humphreys E and Kennedy C (2015). ‘Midwives’ and obstetricians’ perceptions of risk and its impact on clinical practice and decision-making in labour: an integrative review’. Women and Birth, in press. http://tinyurl.com/jdlcq4m

Moon EJ (2015). A comparison of maternity care models and their relationship to adverse fetal and neonatal outcomes: a retrospective cohort study based in New Zealand (Thesis, Master of Public Health), Dunedin: University of Otago. http:// tinyurl.com/h665hnb

 



Midwife-led continuity models versus other models of care: review and reflections by Sarah Chapman

is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

1 Comments on this post

  1. NZ only has few numbers of women who opt for Dr led care which is supposed to be the same continuity model (LMC) and yes they do have higher levels of intervention. But 84% of all NZ women most of whom (97%) have midwives as LMC, labour and birth in maternity hospitals and so intervention rates overall have been increasing since this model became universally available! So NZ shows that Place of birth is as important or more important that continuity of carer.

    Denise Hynd / Reply

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